How Bernie Sanders crushed Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire

One year ago, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton led Sen.
Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) by more than 40 points in New
Hampshire.

Tuesday night, she seemed headed for a loss of more than 20
points.

Sanders delivered a shellacking in the first-in-the-nation
primary state of New Hampshire, a showing he hopes will provide
him momentum heading into subsequent early-voting states.

"Tonight, with what appears to be a record-breaking voter
turnout, because of a huge voter turnout, and I say
huge, we won," he said in a victory speech. "Because we
harnessed the energy and the excitement that the Democratic Party
will need to succeed in November."

And a closer look revealed just how dominant his victory turned
out to be. Exit polls showed that he dominated among nearly every
subgroup.

Here's a look:

Among men, Sanders won 66% to 32%.

Among women Sanders had an edge of 55% to 44%.

Sanders won 83% of the vote among voters ages 18 to 29, 66%
with 30- to 44-year-olds, and 53% in the 45-to-64 age group. One
of the only groups with which he lost was among voters ages 65
and older.

He won among voters at all educational levels, including 64%
of voters with a high-school degree or less and 60% of college
graduates.

Sanders captured majorities among all income levels except
for those making $200,000 a year or more, which broke 53% for
Clinton. He won 71% of voters making less than $30,000 a year.

Sanders narrowly edged out Clinton among registered
Democrats, 52% to 48%. Among independents, he had a stunning
72%-to-25% victory.

He won among both "very liberal" (66%) and moderate (58%)
Democratic voters.